Posts Tagged ‘bird’

Nature Quote - March 25, 2010

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

The mockingbird singing in the oak tree outside my window lifts my heart better than chocolate. For him, and for the fair lady he woos with his sweet spring singing, I found these quotes:

Spring would not be spring without bird songs.
- Francis M. Chapman

I sincerely congratulate you on the arrival of the mockingbird.

Learn all the children to venerate it as a superior being in the
form of a bird, or as a being which will haunt them
if any harm is done to itself or its eggs.
- Thomas Jefferson

I hope you love birds too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven.

- Emily Dickinson

Nature Quotes - September 15, 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

A little ego boost from the Universe:

You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and
the stars; you have a right to be here.
- Desiderata

Of course, this also means that the trees and stars and ants and birds have just the same right, too. And aren’t we lucky that they do?

http://www.worldofcolorgallery.com

Nature Quote - May 10, 2009 - Mothers

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

This one is for all of the mothers out there, who certainly deserve at least a week’s holiday and praise instead of one day! It is, however, in honor of the little mourning dove mother-to-be who sat patient and quiet (and probably petrified) as my family and I made a royal ruckus gardening in and around the porch that holds the hanging basket which she has made a home. Like all mothers, she is brave, dedicated, and at least a little bit crazy.

“God could not be everywhere and therefore He made mothers.” - Jewish proverb

http://www.worldofcolorgallery.com

Mourning Dove Nature Quote

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

This morning while I was making toast and coffee, I looked out onto our porch and noticed a mourning dove in one of our hanging baskets. The basket is planted with an asparagus fern, but apparently there’s still enough room for two mourning doves (the second popped its head up right after I saw the first) and, I hope hope hope, a nest! In their honor, I’ve selected this as today’s Nature Quote:

“Everything on the earth has a purpose, every disease an herb to cure it, and every person a mission.” - Mourning Dove, a member of the Native American Salish tribe

http://www.worldofcolorgallery.com

Are you listening?

Monday, May 4th, 2009

My daughter is learning about the five senses this week in daycare.  She seems especially focused on hearing.  She’s always been one to ask “What’s that sound,” but now she’s more attentive to subtler sounds.  Listening to the world with her, mentally borrowing her fresh, young ears has got me thinking about this awesome sense - how much we use it subconsciously and how much we ignore the wonders it can bring us.

I think we ignore our hearing sometimes because we live in such a noisy world; right  now I’m sitting in my office, listening to the clickety-clack of my fingers on the keyboard, my home’s A/C air intake, and the ridiculously loud tick-tock of the clock on the wall.  I would classify the latter two of the three sounds as moderately annoying.  

I know I’m not the only one who sometimes gets the feeling that you’d like to have a mute button for life.  Or at least the ability to tell all noise (not just toddlers and husbands, but splashing dishwashers and buzzing microwaves and  TV commercials featuring overly-excited salesmen who’ve obviously been told that product sales are directly related to the volume of their voices) to “Shhhhhh!”

I think all of the noise we have to filter through all day makes us tired.  It’s just too much input.  

On the other hand, when I throw open my office window, the sounds I hear make me at once excited, intrigued, and peaceful.  Come to think of it, hang on, I’ll open that window right now. . .

Okay, the first thing I hear kind of detracts from the point - it’s the morning traffic on the mildly major road we live right next to.  (Here’s a piece of free advice:  if you can avoid it, don’t buy the model home that’s at the beginning of a subdivision, right next to a mildly major road.)  

Ah, but now here comes the reward.  Above the traffic I hear the peeping of baby birds in my neighbor’s live oak tree.  I hear the rumble and crackle of distant thunder, warning of the approaching storm.  

And, somehow, these sounds are changed by the high humidity and still air.  It sounds like a rainy day even though the rain hasn’t made it here yet.   

I hear the quiet cheeps of mourning doves and the trills of titmice and chickadees who frequent my bird feeder.  

These nature sounds make me breathe deeper, relax my tensed shoulders, close my eyes and pay attention to all of my less-used senses.  They all deserve some positive input.

When the rain comes, I’ll give them a treat by going outside, feeling the rain on my upturned palms and tasting the big, fresh drops on my tongue.  I’ll see the rain and let my eyes focus on the middle distance. (These eyes do a lot of focusing and examining for my macro photos, they deserve a break.)  And, breathing deeply, I’ll smell the ozone created by the lightning and the loveliness of wet leaves and forest floors.  

Then I’ll really have something to tell my daughter about.  She is an excellent listener.

 

http://www.worldofcolorgallery.com